Trafficked Girl

Regular price €12.99
Regular price €13.99 Sale Sale price €12.99
A01=Jane Smith
A01=Zoe Patterson
A02=Jane Smith
Abuse rape
Age Group_Uncategorized
Age Group_Uncategorized
Author_Jane Smith
Author_Zoe Patterson
Autobiography
automatic-update
British
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=BM
Category=BT
Category=DNC
Category=DNX
Category=JBFK1
Category=JBFK2
Category=JBFK3
Category=JFFE1
Category=JFFE2
Category=JFFE3
COP=United Kingdom
Delivery_Delivery within 10-20 working days
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Girl A TV BBC Anonymous
justice compensation court settled
Language_English
PA=Available
Price_€10 to €20
Prostitution
PS=Active
scandal true crime
Sex Trade
Sex trafficking groomed abused drugs drink
social services children’s home residential unit
softlaunch
Sold Misery
Stop the Traffik
True Story
Women

Product details

  • ISBN 9780008148041
  • Weight: 220g
  • Dimensions: 129 x 198mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Mar 2018
  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
Delivery/Collection within 10-20 working days

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When Zoe was taken into care at the age of 13, she thought she was finally going to escape from the cruel abuse she had suffered throughout her childhood. Then social services placed her in a residential unit known to be 'a target for prostitution', and suddenly Zoe's life was worse than it had ever been before.

Abused and ostracized by her mother, humiliated by her father’s sexual innuendos, physically assaulted and bullied by her eldest brother, even as a young child Zoe thought she deserved the desperately unhappy life she was living.

‘I’ve sharpened a knife for you,’ her mother told her the first time she noticed angry red wounds on her daughter’s arms. And when Zoe didn’t kill herself, her mother gave her whisky, which she drank in the hope that it would dull the miserable, aching loneliness of her life.

One day at school Zoe showed her teacher the livid bruises that were the result of her mother’s latest physical assault and within days she was taken into care.

Zoe had been at Denver House for just three weeks when an older girl asked if she’d like to go to a party, then took her to a house where there were just three men. Zoe was a virgin until that night, when two of the men raped her. Having returned to the residential unit in the early hours of the morning, when she told a member of staff what had happened to her, her social worker made a joke about it, then took her to get the morning-after pill.

For Zoe, the indifference of the staff at the residential unit seemed like further confirmation of what her mother had always told her – she was worthless. Before long, she realised that the only way to survive in the unit was to go to the ‘parties’ the older girls were paid to take her to, drink the drinks, smoke the cannabis and try to blank out what was done to her when she was abused, controlled and trafficked around the country.

No action was taken by the unit's staff or social workers when Zoe asked for their help, and without anyone to support or protect her, the horrific abuse continued for the next few years, even after she left the unit. But in her heart Zoe was always a fighter. This is the harrowing, yet uplifting story, of how she finally broke free of the abuse and neglect that destroyed her childhood and obtained justice for her years of suffering.

Zoe Patterson is 29 and a qualified personal trainer. Having discovered that she has a natural talent for boxing, Zoe is about to start training as a boxing coach in the hope of being able to help other women who have been disadvantaged in some way to improve their self-esteem and create positive futures for themselves.